Six years ago I purchased a wormbin and fed the wrigglers my kitchenscraps. Due to health-problems (not sleeping well) they got ignored for the past year or two. Occasionally I'd feed them but most of the time I simply forgot about them.

Now that I started sleeping better I decided to revive the bin. Despite all the neglect, some worms actually survived. I found about 20 wrigglers and a few eggs. Once I picked them out I added a small bit of food to the bin to lure the once I missed. After a day or three, none has shown so I think I got them all.

The worms lived in a small container for a day while I prepared their new home. I got a few Klämtare boxes and used my drill to drill some holes. For the lower container I used a 2mm drill, for the top one 6mm.

I added some newspaper to the bottom to prevent instant fall through and then I added hydrated coconut fiber to that.

After that the worms moved in. I haven't added breather holes to the lid yet because it doesn't close very tight.

The worms seem happy, they immediately started eating the courgette I put in.

To make sure they can process the amount of scraps I produce, I purchased 150gr of extra worms. It would take a really long time to have them reproduce up to that point.

Not entirely sure about the size of the box but if needed, I'll move them to a bigger home.

My brain doesn’t really retain much info lately. I get easily
overwhelmed and lose track of pretty much everything. A while back I
rediscovered the bulletjournal and after
some initial try-outs in my Hobonichi Cousin I found that the A5-size
currently doesn’t work for me. Too big or too heavy, not sure which
one(probably both), but my hands and wrist start hurting a lot when I
use it. The Cousin now lives on my desk and I don’t spend time at my
desk anymore. I purchased a pocket Leuchtturm1917 notebook (in ‘Berry’,
a nice warm pink) and luckily, my previous experience with a (several
years old) Leuchtturm notebook proved non-standard. That notebook
feathered and bled through like crazy! Several people told me (and
showed photos) of their current notebooks, and those didn’t bleed much
if at all, and no noticeable feathering. So I took the plunge and it
paid off.

The pocket size (close to A6) fits my pocket (any pocket!) and bags
easily and feels very light. After using it for a month I added a small
Quiver
to it, even though I had also stuck a penloop on it already. The penloop
proved a bit tight for my favourite pens, I needed something better and
I love the Quiver on my A5 notebook. I inked up the Pelikan M205
Amethyst with Rohrer & Klingner
Scabiosa
and the Pelikan M205 transparant blue with Rohrer & Klingner
Salix.
I love these ink, but, as most iron-gall-inks, they write a bit on the
dry side (or should I say, a lot.). At first I had an F-nib on the
Amethyst, and that worked great! The transparant blue had an M-nib and
Salix gushed out of that one. I don’t know what happened but I found it
hard to write with. I swapped the nibs, and Scabiosa still wrote great.
Salix, however, decided it did not like the F-nib and decided to go back
to non-gusher-very-dry. I swapped nibs with my other Pelikan (never
hurts to have more, right?) and this time, it seemed more tame. Not sure
if the first M-nib has a slightly bigger feed, or I did something weird
with cleaning. Both of them now write very nicely with the M-nibs.

I inked up the Parker Vector with Pelikan Blue Black (vintage, no idea
if it contains iron-gall, it behaves like it) a while back because I
read somewhere that the vector plays nice with dry/iron-gall inks. It
did play nice! After a while I dumped some leftover Shaeffer
Turquoise
in the cartridge to bring the blue back into blueblack and it turned
into a lovely teal and still writes like a dream.

I have a thing for iron-gall inks. I also have a thing for blueblacks,
apparently. How many could one person possible need… (let me count:
Pelikan, ESSRI, Diamine Registrar’s, Salix, and I still want Platinum
Blueblack…)

I’ve used the bulletjournal nearly everyday this year. I keep it simply,
I write down a few to-do’s for the day (not too many to prevent
overwhelmedness) and I keep track of Nano’s food. I need the defrost it
in time, and to aid proper timing I keep a list of what I have in the
fridge (= ready to eat) and what I have in the freezer. In the evening I
glance at the list and I’ll see instantly if I need to transfer
something so the poor dog doesn’t starve due to poor planning on my
side. I also keep a list of things I want to buy (to prevent mindless
(over)spending) and a waiting-for list for whatever should come in the
mail (usually dogfood and vitamins). So far it has worked well, I feel
less lost and like having something to - sometimes literally - hold on
to. I like the A6 a lot, it can go anywhere with me.

I have too many pens. And I have too many inks. I couldn't keep track of which ink I tried in which pen and if I liked it. Sure, I made notes in my analogue ink-journal but that didn't work quite as well as I'd like.

And suddenly I remembered I had purchased a copy of Tap Forms (a long long time ago for a project that never happened) and I decided to go for it.

It took some time but I've come up with a system I like a lot. It consists of 9 forms that link to eachother (a lot).

About

I live in Amsterdam.
I like good food.
I have a diabetic West Highland White Terrier named Nano.
I get sick a lot.
I used to freak out over needles, up until the point where I fainted. I no longer do this which helps a lot when I have to stick myself or the dog with them.
I love to draw (and don’t do it enough, mostly due to my RA) and geek around with my computer. I write scripts in perl or bash/zsh.
I have no stomach.
I take things literally.